Early March marked the Payne Arcade Business Association's last in-person board meeting for a while. Bar noises and the smell of French fries wafted up the stairs to a wood-paneled space above Brunson's Pub on St. Paul's East Side, where wooden tables formed a large rectangle.
Molly LaFleche hurried in, wearing a light gray pantsuit and carrying a laptop and papers. The dynamic co-owner of Brunson's and president of the Payne Arcade Business Association, LaFleche got right down to business with PABA's board.
The group had big plans: a community mural, a live concert, grant applications, an Earth Day celebration, fundraisers.
Flash forward. The board is still meeting monthly, but virtually. Everything has changed — except the group's commitment to creating an inviting, lively Payne Avenue.
"This neighborhood is so diverse and there's so much here. … This community is full of really talented people and our hearts are in it," said LaFleche.
The Payne-Phalen area has long been a multicultural hub and home to immigrants and refugees. On Payne Avenue alone, there is the Little Burma Grocery, the Italian market Morelli's, Mexican grocer Bymore Supermercado and the Somali-owned Karibu Grocery & Deli.
Over the decades, the East Side has transformed time and time again. In the 1950s and 1960s, it was bustling as companies like Whirlpool, 3M and Hamm's employed thousands of workers there. But economic decline in the following decades drew businesses elsewhere and sucked life out of the neighborhood.
Now, it's time for another transformation: Payne Avenue is being reborn as an arts district.